Snakes & Crafts

The devil is crafty. That means he does not usually show up with a red face and a pitchfork announcing his evil plans. He shows up sounding reasonable. Almost right. Close enough to feel true.

There are plenty of questions in Genesis 3, like, “Why is Eve casually talking to a snake?” And why is Adam standing there like this is totally normal?

But instead of getting distracted by the strange details, notice the strategy. The serpent does not begin with an obvious lie. He begins with a question. “Did God really say…?” He takes something God actually said and slightly twists it.

That is craftiness.

Craftiness is like arts and crafts. You take different pieces and glue them together to make something new. The devil does the same thing. He takes pieces of truth and glues them into a lie.

And if he could deceive someone in a state of sinlessness, imagine how much more carefully we need to pay attention.

We do this too. We say something technically true to a teacher, parent, or friend, but we use that true sentence to hide the part they are really asking about.

The enemy uses truth for the wrong purpose.

Today, listen carefully to your words and your thoughts. Are you telling the whole truth, even when it costs you? When you feel tempted to hide behind something that is “technically true,” choose honesty instead.

You do not defeat a crafty lie by being clever. You defeat it by being truthful.

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Brothers & Their Brain Cells

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When God Said “No.”